Bowers & Wilkins has been making excellent speakers in the United Kingdom for nearly half a century. The company's studio monitors sit atop the mixing desks at world-famous studios like Abbey Road, and its free-standing home stereo speakers have long been among the first choice for hi-fi nuts looking to upgrade from their Polk Audios or KLH Thirty Twos.
But most North Americans only became aware of the venerable speaker company when the iPod showed up. Bowers & Wilkins made the first really awesome-sounding iPod dock, the Zeppelin. The oblong doobie sat on shelves at Apple Stores, drawing the eyes and ears of passersby like a big, black, elliptical showpiece. The Zeppelin Air, which saw a slight speaker redesign and the addition of AirPlay compatibility, followed in 2011. The $600 price tag, while justified given the Zeppelin Air's power and sound quality, was just too high for most people to consider spending on a dock.
Here's something less expensive but still high quality: the Z2. Bowers & Wilkins has gone with a subtler design for its latest AirPlay speaker, moving on from the Brancusian whimsy of the Zeppelin and arriving at something more stark and universally appealing. The Z2 has a pair of forward-facing 3.5-inch drivers, powered by discrete 20-watt Class D amplifiers. There's a dimpled bass port in the back, and a tiny LED in the front to indicate its status.
And, yes, it's a dock. There's a lightning adapter poking out from the center of its bowl-shaped top. This placement is a neat design choice, because when you have the speaker sitting on a shelf or a piece of furniture at roughly eye level, you can't immediately tell it's a dock since the Lightning port is recessed into the body and tucked out of sight. Of course, if you stick an iPhone into it, the speaker's dockiness becomes obvious. But when it's sitting on the shelf sans-iPhone (which is most of the time) it's just a nice, minimal piece of sculpture.

